Documentation Home
MySQL 9.1 Reference Manual
Related Documentation Download this Manual
PDF (US Ltr) - 40.3Mb
PDF (A4) - 40.4Mb
Man Pages (TGZ) - 259.3Kb
Man Pages (Zip) - 366.4Kb
Info (Gzip) - 4.0Mb
Info (Zip) - 4.0Mb


MySQL 9.1 Reference Manual  /  ...  /  Default Error Log Destination Configuration

7.4.2.2 Default Error Log Destination Configuration

This section describes which server options configure the default error log destination, which can be the console or a named file. It also indicates which log sink components base their own output destination on the default destination.

In this discussion, console means stderr, the standard error output. This is your terminal or console window unless the standard error output has been redirected to a different destination.

The server interprets options that determine the default error log destination somewhat differently for Windows and Unix systems. Be sure to configure the destination using the information appropriate to your platform. After the server interprets the default error log destination options, it sets the log_error system variable to indicate the default destination, which affects where several log sink components write error messages. The following sections address these topics.

Default Error Log Destination on Windows

On Windows, mysqld uses the --log-error, --pid-file, and --console options to determine whether the default error log destination is the console or a file, and, if a file, the file name:

  • If --console is given, the default destination is the console. (--console takes precedence over --log-error if both are given, and the following items regarding --log-error do not apply.)

  • If --log-error is not given, or is given without naming a file, the default destination is a file named host_name.err in the data directory, unless the --pid-file option is specified. In that case, the file name is the PID file base name with a suffix of .err in the data directory.

  • If --log-error is given to name a file, the default destination is that file (with an .err suffix added if the name has no suffix). The file location is under the data directory unless an absolute path name is given to specify a different location.

If the default error log destination is the console, the server sets the log_error system variable to stderr. Otherwise, the default destination is a file and the server sets log_error to the file name.

Default Error Log Destination on Unix and Unix-Like Systems

On Unix and Unix-like systems, mysqld uses the --log-error option to determine whether the default error log destination is the console or a file, and, if a file, the file name:

  • If --log-error is not given, the default destination is the console.

  • If --log-error is given without naming a file, the default destination is a file named host_name.err in the data directory.

  • If --log-error is given to name a file, the default destination is that file (with an .err suffix added if the name has no suffix). The file location is under the data directory unless an absolute path name is given to specify a different location.

  • If --log-error is given in an option file in a [mysqld], [server], or [mysqld_safe] section, on systems that use mysqld_safe to start the server, mysqld_safe finds and uses the option, and passes it to mysqld.

Note

It is common for Yum or APT package installations to configure an error log file location under /var/log with an option like log-error=/var/log/mysqld.log in a server configuration file. Removing the path name from the option causes the host_name.err file in the data directory to be used.

If the default error log destination is the console, the server sets the log_error system variable to stderr. Otherwise, the default destination is a file and the server sets log_error to the file name.

How the Default Error Log Destination Affects Log Sinks

After the server interprets the error log destination configuration options, it sets the log_error system variable to indicate the default error log destination. Log sink components may base their own output destination on the log_error value, or determine their destination independently of log_error

If log_error is stderr, the default error log destination is the console, and log sinks that base their output destination on the default destination also write to the console:

  • log_sink_internal, log_sink_json, log_sink_test: These sinks write to the console. This is true even for sinks such as log_sink_json that can be enabled multiple times; all instances write to the console.

  • log_sink_syseventlog: This sink writes to the system log, regardless of the log_error value.

If log_error is not stderr, the default error log destination is a file and log_error indicates the file name. Log sinks that base their output destination on the default destination base output file naming on that file name. (A sink might use exactly that name, or it might use some variant thereof.) Suppose that the log_error value file_name. Then log sinks use the name like this:

  • log_sink_internal, log_sink_test: These sinks write to file_name.

  • log_sink_json: Successive instances of this sink named in the log_error_services value write to files named file_name plus a numbered .NN.json suffix: file_name.00.json, file_name.01.json, and so forth.

  • log_sink_syseventlog: This sink writes to the system log, regardless of the log_error value.